As we’ve noted earlier, much of the media is obsessed with settlements, intent on portraying them as the main obstacle to peace. There’s a tendency on the other side to take one of the most outrageous examples of Palestinian behavior and dismiss it.
As Professor Jacobson noted last week, Israel, in order to entice the Palestinians to negotiate for a state of their own offered to release 104 prisoners from jail. These aren’t just prisoners. Most, if not all, are remorseless murderers who are treated as heroes by all segments of Palestinian society, including their leaders.

One group of people was happy as murderers went free while others wept. But the gulf here is more than emotional or merely, as the Times seemed to describe it, a difficult process that is part of the price Israel must pay for the chance of peace. In fact, the “emotional gulf” is indicative of a vast cultural divide between these two peoples that explains more about the absence of peace than any lecture about history, borders, or refugees. Simply put, so long as the Palestinians honor murderers, there is no reason to believe they are willing to end the conflict.

In Israel, where the returnees are widely viewed as terrorists, the release on Tuesday, like the one in August, has stirred protests and anguish. Many said it was too heavy a price to pay for entering negotiations with no guarantee of a peace accord.

“[W]idely viewed?!?!” This statement is incredible. It’s not only in Israel that they are “viewed as terrorists,” but by definition. Only in the crazy New York Times worldview is the definition of terrorists subjective.

But with each prisoner release — there have been two so far — the Israeli government has tried to appease right-wing members of the coalition by advancing settlement construction plans in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, moves that have deeply embarrassed the Palestinians.

“This is a humiliation process, not a negotiation process,” a Palestinian official said on Thursday.

In this case “deeply embarrassed” is not qualified in any way, but presented as fact.

The first 52 of 104 prisoners have been released on schedule. Freeing prisoners is an unpopular gesture in Israel — all of them were convicted of murdering Israelis — no matter that the inmates have served long terms. …

On Wednesday, Hanan Ashrawi, a member of the Palestine Liberation Organization’s executive committee, charged that Israel’s announcement that it would add new housing units to Jewish settlements around Jerusalem and in the West Bank “has proven once again that it is not a partner for peace.”

The housing announcement was widely seen as a political counterweight to the prisoner release.

Note the qualification about “long terms” as if somehow the fact that they had served long sentences absolves them of guilt (in some countries they’d never have been released), but Ashrawi’s quote is provided with no qualification at all.

Missing from any of this reporting is not just the context that Jonathan Tobin described, but a very disturbing declaration by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

Palestinian Media Watch recalls that in 2005, Abbas said, “I demand [release of] prisoners because they are human beings, who did what we, we, ordered them to do. We – the [Palestinian] Authority.”

Israel agreed to talk with the PLO when the PLO officially renounced terrorism. In fact it never did. When it became untenable to abide by the illusion that Yasser Arafat had renounced terror, President Bush called for Palestinian leadership who were “not compromised by terror.” This statement of Abbas shows that he too is compromised by terror.

The basic requirements for there to be peace between Israel and the Palestinians was that the Palestinian give up terror and accepts Israel’s right to exist. That has never happened. Instead we see a world that consistently relaxes the standards for the Palestinians and tightens them for Israel. Thus we live in an inverted moral universe where building homes is a bigger obstacle to peace than killing people. And people wonder why the conflict is intractable.

About Me

When I am not blogging at Daled Amos, I am sharing articles and the great posts of others on my account on Google Plus.

I write about the Middle East in general and about Israel in particular -- especially about issues affecting Israel in the Middle East and how Israel is impacted by policy in the current Obama administration.